Fiercely divided House kicks Greene off both her committees

A fiercely divided House has tossed Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene off both her committees, an unprecedented punishment that Democrats said she’d earned by spreading hateful and violent conspiracy theories.
Underscoring the political vise
her inflammatory commentary has clamped her party into, nearly all Republicans
voted against the Democratic move Thursday but none defended her lengthy
history of outrageous social media posts.
Yet in a riveting moment, the
freshman Republican from a deep-red corner of Georgia took to the House floor
on her own behalf. She offered a mixture of backpedaling and finger-pointing as
she wore a dark mask emblazoned with the words “FREE SPEECH.”
The chamber’s near party-line
230-199 vote was the latest instance of conspiracy theories becoming pitched
political battlefields, an increasingly familiar occurrence during Donald
Trump’s presidency. He faces a Senate trial next week for his House impeachment
for inciting insurrection after a mob he fueled with his false narrative of a
stolen election attacked the Capitol.
Thursday’s fight also underscored
the uproar and political complexities that Greene — a master of provoking
Democrats, promoting herself and raising campaign money — has prompted since
becoming a House candidate last year.
Eleven Republicans joined 219
Democrats in backing Greene’s ejection from her committees, while 199 GOP
lawmakers voted “no.”
Addressing her colleagues, Greene
tried to dissociate herself from her “words of the past.” Contradicting past
social media posts, she said she believes the 9/11 attacks and mass school
shootings were real and no longer believes QAnon conspiracy theories, which
include lies about Democratic-run pedophile rings.
But she didn’t explicitly
apologize for supportive online remarks she’s made on other subjects, as when
she mulled about House Speaker Nancy Pelosi being assassinated or the
possibility of Jewish-controlled space rays causing wildfires. And she
portrayed herself as the victim of unscrupulous “big media companies.”
News organizations “can take
teeny, tiny pieces of words that I’ve said, that you have said, any of us, and
can portray us as someone that we’re not,” she said. She added that “we’re in a
real big problem” if the House punished her but tolerated “members that condone
riots that have hurt American people” — a clear reference to last summer’s
social justice protests that in some instances became violent.
Greene was on the Education and
Labor committee and the Budget committee. Democrats were especially aghast
about her assignment to the education panel, considering the past doubt she
cast on school shootings in Florida and Connecticut.
The political imperative for
Democrats was clear: Greene’s support for violence and fictions were dangerous
and merited punishment. Democrats and researchers said there was no apparent
precedent for the full House removing a lawmaker from a committee, a step
usually taken by their party leaders.
The calculation was more
complicated for Republicans.
Though Trump left the White House
two week ago, his devoted followers are numerous among the party’s voters, and
he and Greene are allies. Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., hopes GOP
victories in the 2022 elections will make him speaker. Republicans could
undermine that scenario by alienating Trump’s and Greene’s passionate
supporters, and McCarthy took no action to punish her.
“If any of our members threatened the safety of
other members, we’d be the first ones to take them off a committee,” Pelosi
angrily told reporters. She said she was “profoundly concerned” about GOP
leaders’ acceptance of an “extreme conspiracy theorist.”
At one point, No. 2 Democratic
leader Steny Hoyer of Maryland strode to the GOP side of the chamber carrying a
poster of a Greene Facebook post from last year. “Squad’s Worst Nightmare,”
Greene had written in the post, which showed her holding an AR-15 firearm next
to pictures of three of the four Democratic lawmakers, all young women of
color, who’ve been nicknamed “The Squad.”
“They are people. They are our colleagues,”
Hoyer said. He mimicked Greene’s pose holding the weapon and said, “I have
never, ever seen that before.”
Republicans tread carefully but
found rallying points.
McCarthy said Greene’s past
opinions “do not represent the views of my party.” But without naming the
offenders, he said Pelosi hadn’t stripped committee memberships from Democrats
who became embroiled in controversy. Among those he implicated was Rep. Ilhan
Omar, D-Minn., who made anti-Israel insults for which she later apologized.
“If that’s the new standard,” he said of
Democrats’ move against Greene, “we have a long list.”
Rep. Tom Cole, R-Okla., said
Democrats were setting a precedent by punishing lawmakers for statements made
before they were even candidates for Congress. Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, warned,
“You engage in wrong-speak, you’re in the Thunderdome,” a term for an enclosed
wrestling arena.
Committee assignments are crucial
for lawmakers for shaping legislation affecting their districts, creating a
national reputation and raising campaign contributions. Even social media stars
like Greene could find it harder to define themselves without the spotlights
that committees provide.
Not all Republicans were in
forgiving moods, especially in the Senate. There, fringe GOP candidates have
lost winnable races in recent years and leaders worry a continued linkage with
Trump and conspiracists will inflict more damage.
That chamber’s minority leader,
Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., this week called Greene’s words a “cancer” on the GOP
and country. On Thursday, No. 2 Senate GOP leader John Thune of South Dakota
amplified that thinking.
Thune said House Republicans
needed to issue a “really strong” rebuke of Greene’s conspiratorial
formulations. Republicans must “get away from members dabbling in conspiracy
theories,” Thune said. “I don’t think that’s a productive course of action or
one that’s going to lead to much prosperity politically in the future.”
The fight came a day after
Republicans resolved another battle and voted to keep Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo.,
in their leadership. Pro-Trump conservatives tried removing her because she
supported Trump’s impeachment.
The House resolution punishing
Greene was barely over a page. It said House rules require lawmakers’ behavior
to “reflect credibly” on the chamber and said Greene should be removed “in
light of conduct she has exhibited.”
News organizations have unearthed
countless social media videos and “likes” in which Greene embraced absurd
theories like suspicions that Hillary Clinton was behind the 1999 death of John
F. Kennedy Jr. Greene responded, “Stage is being set,” when someone posted a
question about hanging Clinton and former President Barack Obama.